Graham Nash Adds Fall Tour Dates

May 5, 2026—Two-time Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee and founding member of both the Hollies and Crosby, Stills & Nash Graham Nash is set to continue his 2026 tour throughout the fall with newly confirmed dates including stops at the Harvest Jazz & Blues Festival in Fredricton, NB; the Academy of Music in Northampton, MA; the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts in Bethel, NY and more.

The new dates follow Nash’s current summer tour which finds him performing select co-headline dates with Emmylou Harris as well as a special appearance at the famed Red Rocks Amphitheatre with the Avett Brothers. See below for a complete list of dates, tickets are available at grahamnash.com.

Nash will be joined on stage by Todd Caldwell (keyboards and vocals), Adam Minkoff (bass, drums, guitars and vocals) and Zach Djanikian (guitars, mandolin, drums and vocals), performing favorites from across his sixty-plus year career.

Nash’s first studio album of new material in seven years, Now (2023), was the subject of extensive critical praise from The New York Times, The New Yorker, USA Today, The Broken Record podcast, SPIN and many more.

In addition to his two Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductions (with Crosby, Stills & Nash and the Hollies), Nash is a two-time inductee to the Songwriters Hall of Fame—as a solo artist and with CSN—and a Grammy Award winner. Towering above virtually everything that Graham Nash has accomplished in his multifaceted career stands the litany of songs that he has written and introduced to the soundtrack of the past half century.

Nash’s remarkable body of work began the Hollies opus from 1964 to ’68. His contributions to Crosby, Stills & Nash and Déjà Vu are lightning rods embedded in our DNA, starting with “Marrakesh Express,” “Pre-Road Downs” and “Lady of the Island” from the former and “Teach Your Children” and “Our House” from the latter. Nash’s career as a solo artist took flight in 1971 with two albums further showcasing the depths of his abilities as a singer and songwriter, yielding “Chicago/We Can Change the World,” “Military Madness,” “I Used To Be A King” and “Simple Man.”

His passionate voice has long been heard in support of peace and social and environmental justice. The No Nukes/Musicians United for Safe Energy (MUSE) concerts he organized with Jackson Browne and Bonnie Raitt in 1979 remain seminal benefit events. In September 2013, Nash released his long-awaited autobiography Wild Tales, which landed him on The New York Times Best Sellers list. In recognition of his contributions as a musician and philanthropist, Nash was appointed an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (OBE) by Queen Elizabeth II. While continually building his musical legacy, Nash is also a renowned photographer and visual artist whose work has been shown in galleries and museums worldwide. Most recently Nash released A Life In Focus: The Photography Of Graham Nash (via Insight Editions), in which he reflects on more than fifty years of an extraordinary life in an extensive collection of personal photographs and artistic stills.

GRAHAM NASH TOUR

July 7—Steamboat Springs, CO—Strings Music Festival

July 9—Beaver Creek, CO—Vilar Performing Arts Center

July 10—Beaver Creek, CO—Vilar Performing Arts Center

July 12—Morrison, CO—Red Rocks Amphitheatre*

July 14—Kansas City, MO—Kauffman Center

July 15—Iowa City, IA—The Englert

July 17—St. Louis, MO—The Sheldon

July 18—St. Louis, MO—The Sheldon

July 20—Madison, WI—The Orpheum

July 21—Champaign, IL—Virginia Theatre

July 23—Interlochen, MI—Kresge Auditorium†

July 24— Rochester Hills, MI—Meadow Brook Amphitheater†

July 26—Highland Park, IL—Ravinia†

July 28—Cincinnati, OH—Madison Theater

July 29—Knoxville, TN—Bijou Theatre

July 31— Henrico, VA—Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden

August 1—Wilmington, NC—The Wilson Center

August 3—Alexandria, VA—The Birchmere

August 4—Alexandria, VA—The Birchmere

September 12—Northampton, MA—Academy of Music

September 13—Lowell, MA—Boarding House Park

September 15—Portsmouth, NH—Jimmy’s Jazz & Blues Club

September 17—Stowe, VT—Spruce Peak Performing Arts Center

September 19—Fredricton, NB—Harvest Jazz & Blues Festival 2026

September 20—Waterville, ME—Waterville Opera House

September 23—Geneva, NY—Smith Opera House

September 24—Bethlehem, PA—Zoellner Arts Center

September 26—Troy, NY—Troy Saving Bank Music Hall

September 27—Bethel, NY—Bethel Woods Center for the Arts

September 28—Bethel, NY—Bethel Woods Center for the Arts

September 30—Torrington, CT—Warner Theatre

October 2—Morristown, NJ—Mayo PAC

October 3—Wilmington, DE—The Playhouse of Rodney Square

October 6—Lexington, KY—The Kentucky Theatre

October 8—Mount Vernon, OH—Memorial Theater

October 9—Shippensburg, PA—Luhrs Center

BOLD dates are newly confirmed

*Special Guest of the Avett Brothers

†Co-bill with Emmylou Harris